The Star Early Edition

Tokyo eyes smoke-free Olympics in 2020

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TOKYO: Japan must make public places in Tokyo smokefree by the time it hosts the 2020 Summer Olympics or risk falling afoul of IOC rules that call for a healthy games, activists said yesterday.

Japan’s health minister has said the government is eager to stamp out smoking in public by the time of the Games but smoking remains so entrenched there is still a cigarette vending machine in a Health Ministry annex.

The IOC requires “tobaccofre­e” games and all recent host cities have passed legislatio­n to ban smoking in indoor and enclosed public spaces, including restaurant­s, bars and cafes.

Japanese laws encourage restaurant­s and other public areas to limit exposure to second-hand smoke by setting up barriers or separate smoking and nonsmoking areas but there are no punishment­s for noncomplia­nce.

Smokers can even light up at schools and hospitals.

“The situation for preventing passive smoking in Japan is on a level with that in a developing nation,” said Manabu Sakuta, chairman of the non-government­al organisati­on Japan Society for Tobacco Control.

“We hope for improvemen­t so there will not be lots of problems with passive smoking in all the parts of Tokyo that do not meet the Olympic standards, as well as the venues after they are built.”

Health Minister Yasuhisa Shiozaki said in January that his ministry aimed to submit a bill on preventing passive smoking during the current session of parliament.

“According to the World Health Organizati­on, Japan’s measures to prevent passive smoking are among the world’s worst,” he said.

But tightening up the rules faces strong opposition from restaurant management organisati­ons, which fear the impact on their business.

Smoking rates have fallen in Japan due to greater health awareness and higher cigarette prices, health ministry data shows, and about 30 percent of men and 7.9 percent of women smoke.

Keisuke Kurimoto, a deputy director of the ministry’s Health Services Section, said it was too early to say what the contents of the proposed bill will be or if it would be ready before the current session ends, probably in June.

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